He didn’t invite anyone to shut it down. He simply gave more people the power to shut it down than already had it and invited us to practice not using that power. (I think this was permissible.)
But for the sake of argument, even if Aaron did invite us to shut it down, that would not mean that Aaron’s action was necessarily permissible. Maybe it would be since service providers have the right to stop providing services, but when the stakes are sufficiently high suddenly deciding to just stop providing a service to harm all your customers seems unethical (e.g. if Bezos and/or whoever else has the authority at Amazon decided to just shut down Amazon without warning).
He didn’t invite anyone to shut it down. He simply gave more people the power to shut it down than already had it and invited us to practice not using that power. (I think this was permissible.)
But for the sake of argument, even if Aaron did invite us to shut it down, that would not mean that Aaron’s action was necessarily permissible. Maybe it would be since service providers have the right to stop providing services, but when the stakes are sufficiently high suddenly deciding to just stop providing a service to harm all your customers seems unethical (e.g. if Bezos and/or whoever else has the authority at Amazon decided to just shut down Amazon without warning).